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Wilson is among the most popular, widely read, and beloved cartoonists in the history of the medium, whose career spans the second half of the 20th century and all of the 21st. His work has been seen by millions - no, hundreds of millions - in the pages of Playboy (Wilson appeared in every issue…

Allen Koszowski''s journal, Inhuman, is a throwback to the old-fashioned horror of the past. Authors include such luminaries as Gahan Wilson and Michael Bishop. In this issue, Allen includes a gallery of artwork by some noted artists, all based on John W. Campbell''s Who Goes There?

In this thematically and narratively linked series of one-page stories originally published in the National Lampoon''s "Funny Pages" section throughout the 1970s, Gahan Wilson eschewed his usual ghouls, vampires, and end-of-the-world scenarios for a wry, pointed look at growing up normal in the…

For more than twenty-five years, Gahan Wilson's unique perspective on the world has been making people laugh. His cartoons have been found in the pages of National Lampoon, Playboy, and The New Yorker. Still Weird , Wilson's first major collection, includes selections from the whole body of his…

Gahan Wilson is one of the masters of macabre cartooning, ranked with Charles Addams, Edward Gorey, and Gary Larson. He is also a masterful storyteller. From the horror of "blot" to the gentle unease of "Campfire Story," from the classic oral-horror style of "The Marble Boy" to the science fiction…

The difference being that this middle school novel is written entirely in Haiku. Loeb, its zombie protagonist has a problem: the object of his affection, Siobhan, is a lifer (i.e. human). What to do? In scenes set around a lunch table (the menu: brains) and around the school, eyes roll and jaws…

Gahan Wilson is probably best known for his macabre Playboy cartoons-filled with charming monsters, goofy mad scientists, and melting victims-and his cutting-edge work in National Lampoon, but in 1964, he brought his brilliantly controlled wiggly-but-sophisticated pen line to the Magazine of…

Gahan Wilson Sunday Comics is macabre Playboy cartoonist Gahan Wilson''s subversive, little-known syndicated strip that appeared in America''s newspapers between 1974 and 1976. While each strip appears to be a standard, color Sunday strip (albeit without panel borders), each Sunday Comic is a…

Gahan Wilson's Even Weirder collects more cartoons from the macabre master and longtime Playboy contributor. Nearly 150 Gahan Wilson cartoons appear for the very first time anywhere in Gahan Wilson's Even Weirder . An additional 90 cartoons make their debut in book form, after initial publication…